BRITS BUILDING GIGANTIC TURBINES
Ed Miliband announces boost for green jobs; Energy and climate change secretary announces funding for a new factory that will make the largest offshore windblades in the world
Helene Mulholland, 17 September 2009 (UK Guardian)
"The [UK] energy and climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, …announced a boost for green jobs including government funding for a new factory in the north-east, which will make the largest offshore wind blades in the world.
"Miliband unveiled the £4.4m grant to Clipper Windpower to develop offshore wind turbines, with blades 70m long, 175m high, and weighing over 30 tonnes…[as big as a jumbo jet]…"
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[Ed Milliband, UK secretary for energy and climate change:] "With strong government backing, the UK is consolidating its lead in offshore wind energy. We already have more offshore wind energy than any other country, we have the biggest wind farm in the world about to start construction, and now we'll see the biggest turbine blades in the world made here in Britain…Our coastline means the offshore wind industry has the potential to employ tens of thousands of workers by 2020."
"James Dehlsen, chairman of Clipper Windpower, said the government grant would accelerate planning and delivery of the project. The move was welcomed by Friends of the Earth…As part of the £120m investment the government has promised over the next two years, Artemis Intelligent Power will also be given £1m to transfer existing technology from automotive to wind energy. Siemens Wind Power will receive £1.1m in developing power converters for their larger offshore turbine."
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"Clipper, a US company listed as the UK's only wind turbine maker, will start work at a new plant near Blyth, Northumberland, next year to develop the blades for its giant turbines. It is expected to employ 60 people by the end of 2010. Ministers are keen to redeem themselves after the closure of Vesta, the wind turbine factory on the Isle of Wight, which led to the loss of more than 600 jobs…"
[Miliband, describing the Vestas plant closure as a tragedy:] "We spent months working with the company…They told us money wasn't a problem. They said their problem was that they didn't have enough orders for onshore wind turbines, because some councils wouldn't let wind turbines go up…"
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